The reality star, 65, stepped out in L.A. to attend a speaking engagement at the Los Angeles LGBT Youth Center. Jenner slipped into a pair of medium-wash skinny jeans for the event, tucking her denim into a pair of knee-high heeled black leather boots, and adding a black scoop-neck top.

Jenner carried an oversized black umbrella to shield her loose brunette locks from the rain, and sported bright red nails. She accessorized the look with a simple bracelet on her wrist and studs in her ears.

The Olympic athlete (once known as Bruce) continued her career in public speaking at the LGBT center, where she spoke to employees about the organization's work and took a tour of the facility.

"Jenner’s visit also included roundtable and one-on-one discussions with current and former clients, including some from LifeWorks, the Center’s youth development and mentoring program," a rep for the center told Us Weekly in a statement. "Jenner also spoke with the program manager for the Center's Transgender Economic Empowerment Project, which helps transgender women and men, who experience unemployment at twice the rate of the national population, develop professional skills, find employment with trans-friendly employers, and thrive in the workplace... She also dropped off a donation to the Center's clothes closet, which youth can access for clean, gently-used clothing."

After dodging rumors about her identity for years, Jenner reintroduced herself as Caitlyn with the instantly famous July 2015 Vanity Fair cover. In the days since, she joined Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook, and hyped her upcoming appearance at July's 2015 ESPY Awards, where she will receive the Arthur Ashe Courage Award.

"I’m just going to go live life, I’m going to go enjoy life," Jenner told Vanity Fair of her days ahead. "I have nothing left to hide. I am kind of a free person, a free soul. [Up] to this point I would wear, you know, Bruce would wear, you know, sweatshirts with hoods on them so paparazzi can’t get pictures and all that kind of crap, and I didn’t want them to see if my fingernails were polished or, you know, on and on and on. It was just hell."